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Introduction to the University of the Future

Peter Hübner’s Cosmic Educational Program

Peter Hübner
Developer of the University of the Future

Peter Hübner
Open letter to the President of the Justus-Liebig-State-University Giessen, Germany

ARCHIVE

MEDICINE

THEORETICAL FUNDAMENTALS

Nature’s Laws of
Harmony in the
Microcosm of Music

MUSIC + BRAIN
Part 1   •   Part 2

Chronomedicine

Music as a Harmonic
Medical Data Carrier

The Special Status of the
Ear in the Organism

The Ear as a
Medical Instrument

The Significance of the
Soul to Medicine

The Significance of
our Consciousness
to Medicine

The Significance of the
Soul to Human Evolution

The Future of Pharmaceutics

SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
REPORTS

The American Institute
of Stress

World Health
Organization (WHO)

Republic of Belarus

Stress + Heart Disease

The Unborn Child

Special Care Baby Unit

Harmonic Therapy

The Benefits of
Harmonic Information

Social Medical Significance

Headaches & Migraine

Harmonic Information
as a Modern Medication

Intensive Care Unit

MRT Music / Function

Chernobyl

SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH

Medical Research –
Clinical Observations

MEDICAL RESONANCE THERAPY MUSIC

Medical Music Preparations on CD

STORE





 Prof. Dr. med. Rosch / Prof. Dr. med. Koeditz  •  Music & Brain – Medical Perspective
Explanation of the terms:
  1. “natural harmony laws of the microcosm of music”

  2. “music of natural harmonic order”

  3. “music of natural harmonic logic”

“Eve­ry tone or sound has, to some de­gree, a rich in­ter­nal life. One can hear it and also make it even more au­di­ble. This in­ter­nal life of a tone or sound can be most mean­ing­fully de­scribed as “the mi­cro­cosm of mu­sic”.
From the first sound im­pulse, a sound growths in time and space into a com­plex tonal and rhyth­mi­cal pat­tern, like a tree from a seed and at some point in time it decays – like eve­ry other thing in crea­tion.

To­day, these in­ter­nally liv­ing struc­tural de­vel­op­ments of tones and sounds can be ren­dered visi­ble and au­di­ble us­ing spe­cial sci­en­tific de­vices.

Thus to­day it is sci­en­tifi­cally and tech­no­logi­cally pos­si­ble to filter out in­di­vid­ual in­ter­nal tonal and rhyth­mi­cal de­vel­op­ments from a tone or sound and, as such, to ex­am­ine them.

And if we spa­tially and tem­po­rally lengthen these acous­tic ex­pres­sions, which may them­selves last only frac­tions of a sec­ond, then we rec­og­nise in each one of them an in­fi­nite num­ber of con­nected move­ments – each of them a com­pletely in­di­vid­ual vari­able tone with its own vari­able pitch and volume, its own vari­able rhythm, its own point and time of ori­gin and a com­pletely unique pat­tern of de­vel­op­ment – noth­ing short of “a per­sonal jour­ney through life”.

Nev­er­the­less, there are fixed rules in their evo­lu­tion, like those we also know in the physi­cal, chemi­cal, bio­logi­cal or as­tro­nomi­cal world as “natu­ral laws” – the natu­ral har­mony laws of the mi­cro­cosm of mu­sic. And the spe­cific term to de­scribe the qual­ity of natu­ral struc­tures in­her­ent in sound evo­lu­tion is “of natu­ral har­monic or­der”. “Mu­sic of natu­ral har­monic or­der” and “mu­sic of natu­ral har­monic logic” thus refer to the natu­ral struc­tures and logic of sound evo­lu­tion.*

The sys­tem­atic in­ves­ti­ga­tion and fo­cused ap­pli­ca­tion of the mi­cro­cosm of mu­sic in the field of medi­cine ap­pears sen­sa­tional in so far as it is pos­si­ble to­day, for the first time, to grasp mu­si­cal struc­tures both quali­ta­tively and quan­ti­ta­tively, to ar­range them in or­der and to re­late their pa­rame­ters to those of the medi­cal meas­ure­ments ob­jec­tively and with re­pro­duci­bil­ity on a sci­en­tific basis.

An ob­jec­tive medi­cal ap­pli­ca­tion of mu­sic should be based on the natu­ral reso­nance ca­pa­bil­ity be­tween the natu­ral laws of har­mony of the mi­cro­cosm of mu­sic and the natu­ral laws of har­mony of bio­logi­cal life. The task is to ac­ti­vate the natu­ral laws of har­mony of bio­logi­cal life via the brain us­ing the natu­ral laws of har­mony of the mi­cro­cosm of mu­sic, and in the course of this to make these more read­ily avail­able to the brain ac­tiv­ity and be­yond this to the en­tire hu­man or­gan­ism.”

Ex­cerpts from a lec­ture of the clas­si­cal com­poser and mu­si­colo­gist Peter Hübner at the Uni­ver­sity of Tel Aviv





The Microcosm of Music – Orchester 11
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